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14
Jun 11

On campus today

Spent the day at Samford. Well, spent lunch here:

Whataburger

I had been craving Whataburger since somewhere midway through the cruise. Odd, really, to be on a floating buffet of extravaganza institutionalized with a dual lack of dietary restraint and judgment and want a burger, but there it was.

So we stopped for lunch at Whataburger, where I had the cheesed variety and fries. And I admired the famous Whataburger print. I love that shot. Ideally I’d have 95 percent of the things hanging in my house to be photographs that we’ve taken, places we’ve been and the people we love. And then I’d have two or three other things that were gifts, a few posters and that print. I can’t say why, but it is about as Americana as you can get, from the air vent to the faux-stone wall, in one frame.

That 1950s little league team reunited last year. Whataburger is the title sponsor of a minor league ballpark and they rounded up the guys, now in the 60s or so, and had them through out the first pitch. Four of them did the honors in Corpus Christi, Texas, home of the first Whataburger. The restaurant conducted a nationwide search and found those guys, some lost to time, at least one lost to war, but others, still enjoying a good french fry from time to time.

Anyway. Back to campus today. Phone calls to return. Emails to Email. Things to print. Heavy things to move from here to there. Stopped in a few offices. Conducted an inventory of video equipment.

Discovered I had a “bad duplexer connection” in my printer. Great, I guess this means no going back in time to play Johnny B. Goode at the high school dance.

The whole thing was a four-hour party. (The inventory, not the Johnny B. Goode. That would be one great drum solo, though.)

I’ll only be on campus once or twice more this summer, so counting lens caps and XLR cables in a hot room is a small tradeoff.

Dodged traffic, got home just as the sun was going down. Enjoyed the evening at home and set about catching up here. There’s a lot to do.


13
Jun 11

So this is what my home looks like

You can forget these things. It has been 17 days, a multitude of states, three beds and two countries since we’ve been here last. Someone wrote asking about my day. Just fine, can you tell me where my restroom is?

Brian stopped in for a visit with his daughter this afternoon. They were passing through town and we guilted them into a visit. We could not guilt them into corn nuggets. There will be repercussions.

Corn

A new thing they are doing at Publix, identifying the local growers. “Hi, my name is Bo and I grow corn because it keeps me one with the earth, and also justifies the vast stores of butter I keep on the family property.”

At the grocery store we were asked six times — six! — if we needed help. How great it is to be home. We must looked exhausted or confused or they’ve forgotten who we are.

We had an interesting conversation about this in New York, actually. The North is fine. Good folks, same as anywhere, really. (In fact each one I’ve met on a personal level in six years of visiting has been kind, welcoming and hospitable.) But their attention is a bit different. There’s the pace, sure, but most importantly there is the distraction of self. Our friend John, who grew up in the Bronx, kept trying to say that people aren’t rude, they are just far, far more concerned about their own little world than they ever will be with you. That’s fine, as far as it goes. They’re in the hustle, the bustle and are completely focused on themselves.

One man asked me three times today if he could help me at the grocery store. One man. Three times! Three of his co-workers also tried to help. We visited a grocery store in Boston and the people were helpful if you asked. Everyone you meet in Boston is very nice. You meet plenty of nice people in New York. A random man walked up and gave us directions as we consulted our iPhone directions in Manhattan. “Go down to 72nd and over one block … I promise.” The pause was such that he knew we were skeptical. But he had no reason to lie about it. We turned that way and he told us to enjoy our afternoon. (He gave us the right directions.)

Conversely you’ll get ran over for even considering reading a sign. And chivalry is right out. They aren’t merely self-centered in their own daily dramas.

Personally I think many they’re miserable and afraid to admit it as a sign of weakness. I like New York, that’s a great town — and the pace doesn’t bother me, I can do fast — but there are too many people and nothing feels your own. Here I have my grocery store. There people have a store that they go to. Here I can be a regular at various establishments. There you’re just one more order and for heaven’s sake don’t stutter. It all feels like the psychological equivalent of hot cotting. That has to grate on the psyche. I suspect I’d have that impression in Tokyo or Beijing or any megaplex. The older I get the more a small town appeals to me.

Sure, Wikipedia says New York City has 88 theatres, and Boston has — well, the Bruins and Patriots, I guess — but I can park a car most anywhere I go. It is a tradeoff.

Nice to see my car again today, too. It cranked and everything! Which is good, because I’ll need it tomorrow.


12
Jun 11

We’re home. I think.

First thing I saw when I woke up this morning: the Statue of Liberty. That’s not a bad start to any day.

Actually the first thing I saw this morning was at about 3 a.m. There was an odd light peering through the curtains into our cabin. I walked out to the deck to see the place where mist, fog and rain mingle. We were still miles from nowhere, hours from light, but the world somehow had a bright gray sheen to it.

In retrospect that was one of the brighter parts of the day. It was quite the overcast experience back in New Jersey, and then driving through New York and finally into Connecticut. We unpacked the car and then ventured out for more food.

Because you need that after a cruise.

Actually, you need this:

Pepes

That pizza is so good.

Also, you might remember that our friend Wendy came out to visit with us and we took her to New York City. Anyone that knows Wendy knew this was a possibility. She turned the city to the South:

Pepes

So pizzas, and then back home to shuffle things around in our luggage. We were headed to the airport when the phone rang. Our plane was delayed. So we went visiting, spending a few minutes with one set of family friends and dinner with another set.

Our 7 p.m. Delta flight finally left well after 10 p.m. But the crew was great. And their day wasn’t done. Once we landed in Atlanta they had to do a turn to Omaha. We were in Atlanta at 1 a.m., local, which is as post-apocalyptic a vibe as you’ll ever feel at that airport.

So we collected our luggage, fumbled around for the shuttle to the hotel where our car was parked. Picked up the car, aired up a tire and then drove home.

(Update: After I unpacked it was 3 a.m. Our day started 20 hours, a ship, two shuttles, a tram, an SUV a car and five states earlier.

But all of that was a small price to pay for such a great trip. Wonderful, wonderful journey.


11
Jun 11

The last of the cruise pictures and notes

We’ll wake up in New Jersey tomorrow, so this is just to put a bow on the last of a great trip with nice people. There are a few pictures, a video, three panoramas and an interactive 3D photograph below.

Some people say this is the best beach in Bermuda. Tobacco Beach, was named by survivors of the famous Sea Venture after they discovered tobacco growing here. The snorkeling is said to be terrific. The cliff faces are limestone.

TobaccoBeach

One of the neat things about my father-in-law is the stuff he stores in his head. If he isn’t make a joke he’s trying to teach you something. I wonder what he’s telling her here:

Lessons

Our waiters for the trip, Delroy and Mario. They were quite good:

MarioDelroy

On this, the last day of the cruise, we had what the crew called a “lavish” brunch. They understand the definition of this word. It was ridiculous; it was divine. Whenever you have a chocolate fountain for breakfast you are living right.

Watermelon

We watched an ice carving demonstration yesterday. The guy just chopped up a block by hand into a screeching, striking eagle. After he finished people came up to take pictures of the sculpture. And then a woman stepped on a piece of ice, fell, knocked over a toddler and almost started a big fight by grown women. Remember, friends, ice is slippery. And watch your children.

Anyway, this was also at the brunch, and that’s a sculpture with utility:

Ice

Some panoramas I’ve shot the last few days, click to see the full image.

Horseshoe

Horseshoe

Horseshoe

Want to see how a big ship leaves port? Four casting lines, a guy on the back pushing for all he’s worth and port-side thrusters.

And, finally, I’ve fooled myself into thinking that I’ve just about figured out the Photosynth software. Here’s an interactive, 3D view of the lovely Horseshoe Bay.

Miss it already.

Tomorrow we’ll be back in the States, and then late in the evening we’ll be back home.


9
Jun 11

Another afternoon at Horseshoe Bay

You could spend a lot of time here. Really you could. I snorkeled for about two hours, finding all kinds of fish, including an amberjack, grouper, parrotfish, squirrelfish and about a dozen other varieties. There were nice brain coral, fans, a few tube specimens and black amenomes.

At depths of about 15 or 20 feet it was like looking into the bottom of a pool. All the rocks you’ve seen in the pictures, I swam those until the water grew too cold. And then I sat int he shade of a nice rental umbrella, climbed the rocks, took pictures, shot video and generally had a perfect day at the beach.

Horseshoe

Yesterday we saw this sand-gator. Today someone put orange peel eyes on him. It didn’t bother this guy at all to take a nap there.

Horseshoe

We went for a climb up the big rocks that border Horseshoe Bay. Great views. You can see for miles to either side and straight to the sandy bottom of the water from your high perch.

Horseshoe

I grew up with all-sand beaches. Rocks and sand are nice novelty to me.

Horseshoe

The Horseshoe Bay beach from up high on the rocks.

Horseshoe

When we left the beach we visited a small crafts fair. Wook in a few shops, too. There was a glassworks shop, too. They are selling and making things all day and night in there. They also had a cabinet of found bottles they would be happy to sell you.

Horseshoe

Some were dug up from the area, others had been discovered in the waters around the island. At least two of these on this shelf were from the 19th century. Once they held coffee and perfume and the people that held them would have thought it silly there’s a hobby centered around collecting their empties.

The Yankee and my mother-in-law just before we re-boarded the cruise ship.

Horseshoe

Sunset over King’s Warf, Bermuda.

Horseshoe

Tomorrow, we’re going diving. And you’ll have other pictures from today. I did not bring an underwater camera, unfortunately.